Who invented Mobile phone ? ,Lots of time thought comes to mind .today I am gonna cover about the history of mobile device .how idea comes mind to Martin Cooper,Father of cell phone.
Motorola was the first company to produce a handheld mobile phone. On April 3, 1973, Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher and executive, made the first mobile telephone call from handheld subscriber equipment, make a call to Dr. Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs, his rival.
I'm Martin Cooper, call me Marty. I'm known as the father of
the cell phone. My colleagues and I introduced the very first cell phone to the
world. From my earliest memories, even when I was a little boy, I was taking
things apart. I saw some kids on the street burning a piece of paper using a
magnifying glass. I wanted to do that. I broke a Coke bottle and tried to make
a lens out of it. Failed of course But I always knew I was going to be an
engineer.
Well back in the early 70s,I was with Motorola. We were a
leader in two-way radio business. The radio channels were the basis of what our
business was. AT& amp T came along
and said well, we're going to set you free, freedom! Now you're gonna be
trapped in your car instead of in your home or at your desk.
They'd invented a thing called cellular telephony that was
more spectrally efficient. And what that means is you could have more people
talking on every radio channel in a city. And AT& amp T said they were gonna
do every everything. They were gonna do personal telephone communications. They
were gonna do dispatch the way the police and fire people work. This is very
good, as far as the FCC was concerned, because then they wouldn't have to worry
about licensing every single person. They would just give one license to
AT& ampT and they wouldn't have to worry about it anymore.
Well we didn't like that very much at Motorola. That would
have essentially taken over our business. So we started a battle with them in
the 60s.
The battles consisted of filings to the FCC, hearings in Washington. And
around 1972 we heard the FCC is about to make a decision and we were really
worried. We had to get to the attention of the people in Washington. We had to
demonstrate to them that number one, you didn't have to have a monopoly. You
could have competition. And the second thing is, the idea of building a phone
that trapped you in a car didn't make any sense to us at all.
We believed, and
believe still today, that freedom means you can talk anywhere, and we had to
show that a personal portable phone was possible. And the best way to do that is
to actually build one .And that's what stimulated building this first cell phone.
So here we are on the streets of New York, on April 3rd, 1973.And I'm with a
journalist. And I have to make an impression on the guy. And I thought you're
not gonna take a chance and call Joel Engel who's my counterpart and my nemesis
at AT&T. So I picked up the phone and I dialed his number. Amazingly he
answered I said, hi Joel, it's Marty Cooper. Hi Marty, he says. I'm calling you
from a cell phone. But a real cell phone.
A personal hand-held portable cell phone. Silence on the other end of the line. I suspected he was gritting his teeth. But he was polite, we finished the call, and that was the first public cellular telephone call. What I felt when that call worked was a sense of relief. It worked. I didn't think at all that this was a historical moment. This phone had literally thousands of individual parts. This is before the large scale integrated circuit had been created, the chip. And so we had to solder each of those individual parts together, we had an engineer standing by in case something broke, because it was totally unreliable. I suspect what Joel felt is what he still feels today, annoyance.
A personal hand-held portable cell phone. Silence on the other end of the line. I suspected he was gritting his teeth. But he was polite, we finished the call, and that was the first public cellular telephone call. What I felt when that call worked was a sense of relief. It worked. I didn't think at all that this was a historical moment. This phone had literally thousands of individual parts. This is before the large scale integrated circuit had been created, the chip. And so we had to solder each of those individual parts together, we had an engineer standing by in case something broke, because it was totally unreliable. I suspect what Joel felt is what he still feels today, annoyance.
Do I think that the cell phone was an important creation in
history? I think it was one of the crucial things, perhaps as important as the
invention of the wheel. We are still in the infancy of what we call a cell phone
and personal communications. We're only now learning the kinds of power that we
can build into a cell phone and it will take a couple of generations before we fulfill the real promise
of what a cell phone is. All cell phones today are sub optimal. Think about how
unnatural it is to want to talk to somebody and hold this flat piece of material
up to your head. Doesn't make any sense at all. But in order to capture
everything that we're trying to do ,we end up with this form factor.
So I envision a future in which the talking part, talking's never gonna go away, you're always gonna want to talk to somebody at some point, and that part may be embedded under your skin behind your ear, along with a powerful computer that you can talk to. Someday you'll be able to think to it and that will be an optimum voice telephone. There will be other devices throughout your body that will be transmitting your body functions for fitness or for the health aspects of it. And they will go through what I call a personal server, the thing that actually communicates from you to the rest of the world. So the future is starting to come upon us where they're working on the software.
So I envision a future in which the talking part, talking's never gonna go away, you're always gonna want to talk to somebody at some point, and that part may be embedded under your skin behind your ear, along with a powerful computer that you can talk to. Someday you'll be able to think to it and that will be an optimum voice telephone. There will be other devices throughout your body that will be transmitting your body functions for fitness or for the health aspects of it. And they will go through what I call a personal server, the thing that actually communicates from you to the rest of the world. So the future is starting to come upon us where they're working on the software.
Getting the software to adapt to people, getting the phone
easier to use, more intuitive and more functional. I became really interested in
artificial intelligence. I think that there are germs of real use of artificial intelligence are just starting to
become practical. So I'm thinking of this question of the app, how useless
having a million apps. I mean, how does a person sort through a million apps
and find the one that's suitable for the concept of the app is wrong. If you
really had good artificial intelligence, you would have a servant, hopefully
one that's smarter than you are ,figure out what you need, and coming up with
solutions. We call those solutions apps, but instead of us looking for the app,
the app ought to find us. What do you think of that? Funny isn't it? Does that
make sense? I want you to know I've never said that before.
Don't you think that's a great idea ,obsoleting the app by having something that creates the app for you. I love that. We created the first portable cell phone in 1973 and here we are 42 years later, just starting to get into some of the important features. So all of these things are going to little by little happen, but they won't happen unless some of us keep dreaming about these things, and feeding the way to the future. I would like to be around indefinitely ,so that I could see everything that happens in the future .But I know that's not gonna happen ,and so my replacement for that is to sit around and dream about those things and live them in advance of when they happen.
Don't you think that's a great idea ,obsoleting the app by having something that creates the app for you. I love that. We created the first portable cell phone in 1973 and here we are 42 years later, just starting to get into some of the important features. So all of these things are going to little by little happen, but they won't happen unless some of us keep dreaming about these things, and feeding the way to the future. I would like to be around indefinitely ,so that I could see everything that happens in the future .But I know that's not gonna happen ,and so my replacement for that is to sit around and dream about those things and live them in advance of when they happen.
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